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Analysis of zinc oxide nanoparticles binding proteins in rat blood and brain homogenate

Authors
Shim, Kyu HwanHulme, JohnMaeng, Eun HoKim, Meyoung-KonAn, Seong Soo A.
Issue Date
15-12월-2014
Publisher
DOVE MEDICAL PRESS LTD
Keywords
brain homogenate; nanotoxicity; plasma; protein corona
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NANOMEDICINE, v.9, pp.217 - 224
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NANOMEDICINE
Volume
9
Start Page
217
End Page
224
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/96473
DOI
10.2147/IJN.S58204
ISSN
1176-9114
Abstract
Nanoparticles (NPs) are currently used in chemical, cosmetic, pharmaceutical, and electronic products. Nevertheless, limited safety information is available for many NPs, especially in terms of their interactions with various binding proteins, leading to potential toxic effects. Zinc oxide (ZnO) NPs are included in the formulation of new products, such as adhesives, batteries, ceramics, cosmetics, cement, glass, ointments, paints, pigments, and supplementary foods, resulting in increased human exposures to ZnO. Hence, we investigated the potential ZnO nanotoxic pathways by analyzing the adsorbed proteins, called protein corona, from blood and brain from four ZnO NPs, ZnOSM20(-), ZnOSM20(+), ZnOAE100(-), and ZnOAE100(+), in order to understand their potential mechanisms in vivo. Through this study, liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy/mass spectroscopy technology was employed to identify all bound proteins. Totals of 52 and 58 plasma proteins were identified as being bound to ZnOSM20(-) and ZnOSM20(+), respectively. For ZnOAE100(-) and ZnOAE100(+), 58 and 44 proteins were bound, respectively. Similar numbers of proteins were adsorbed onto ZnO irrespective of size or surface charge of the nanoparticle. These proteins were further analyzed with ClueGO, a Cytoscape plugin, which provided gene ontology and the biological interaction processes of identified proteins. Interactions between diverse proteins and ZnO nanoparticles could result in an alteration of their functions, conformation, and clearance, eventually affecting many biological processes.
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